|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The fifth volume of Imagery emanates from the matrix of
presentations offered after the conventions of the American
Association for Mental Imagery for the years 1987 and 1988. The
first meeting was held in Toronto; the second at Yale University.
An overview of the presentations covered such a variety of subjects
that we thought the subtitle would be most appropriately--Current
Perspectives. For the first time in five volumes, two contributions
are related to anthropological imagery by Caughey and Brink. John
Caughey, whose book, Imaginary Social Worlds pioneered the social
psychology approach to the silent inner imagination, offers a fine
chapter in anthropological imagery of his own experiences with Sufi
mystics in Pakistan and Micronesian Islanders in the Western
Pacific compared to middle-class Americans. Nicholas Brink follows
with a chapter on "The Healing Powers of the Native American
Medicine Wheel. " Theoretical studies with interesting experimental
designs are presented by Huneycutt, 'fA Functional Analysis of
Imagined Interaction Activity in Everyday Life" by Kunzendorf and
Hoyle on "Auditory Percepts, Mental Images and Hypnotic
Hallucinations: Similarities and Differences in Auditory Evoked
Potentials"; and by Giambia and Grodsky on "Task- Unrelated Images
and Thoughts While Reading. " The relationship between creativity
and mental imgery is presented by H. Rosenberg and W. Trusheim
entitled, "Creative Transformations: How Visual Artists, Musicians
and Dancers Use Mental Imagery in Their Work," and Colalillo-Kates
discusses "Dreamjourneys: Using Guided Imagery and Transformational
Fantasy With Children."
The fifth volume of Imagery emanates from the matrix of
presentations offered after the conventions of the American
Association for Mental Imagery for the years 1987 and 1988. The
first meeting was held in Toronto; the second at Yale University.
An overview of the presentations covered such a variety of subjects
that we thought the subtitle would be most appropriately--Current
Perspectives. For the first time in five volumes, two contributions
are related to anthropological imagery by Caughey and Brink. John
Caughey, whose book, Imaginary Social Worlds pioneered the social
psychology approach to the silent inner imagination, offers a fine
chapter in anthropological imagery of his own experiences with Sufi
mystics in Pakistan and Micronesian Islanders in the Western
Pacific compared to middle-class Americans. Nicholas Brink follows
with a chapter on "The Healing Powers of the Native American
Medicine Wheel. " Theoretical studies with interesting experimental
designs are presented by Huneycutt, 'fA Functional Analysis of
Imagined Interaction Activity in Everyday Life" by Kunzendorf and
Hoyle on "Auditory Percepts, Mental Images and Hypnotic
Hallucinations: Similarities and Differences in Auditory Evoked
Potentials"; and by Giambia and Grodsky on "Task- Unrelated Images
and Thoughts While Reading. " The relationship between creativity
and mental imgery is presented by H. Rosenberg and W. Trusheim
entitled, "Creative Transformations: How Visual Artists, Musicians
and Dancers Use Mental Imagery in Their Work," and Colalillo-Kates
discusses "Dreamjourneys: Using Guided Imagery and Transformational
Fantasy With Children."
|
|